Ford F-150 Lightning fire prompts production halt

Ford Motor Co. confirmed Wednesday that a vehicle fire prompted a production stoppage on the all-electric F-150 Lightning.

The Dearborn automaker also said Wednesday it will keep production of the electric pickup truck down through at least the end of next week as it continues to probe the issue.

The Detroit Free Press first reported news of a vehicle fire. Earlier this week, Ford confirmed it had halted production and stopped shipments of the vehicle over an unidentified battery problem. The F-150 Lightning is built at the Rouge Electric Vehicle Center in Dearborn.

Production at the F-150 Lightning plant will remain down while the company wraps up an investigation “and (applies) what we learn to the truck’s battery production process,” spokesperson Emma Bergg said in a statement Wednesday. Ford said it identified the issue on a Lightning unit during a standard pre-delivery quality inspection. The company believes it has identified the cause, but has not provided further information on the cause.

In all, the process could take a “few” weeks, the company said. Ford will continue holding Lightning units that have been assembled but not yet delivered to dealers.

The company said it’s not aware of any other instances of the battery issue, nor does it believe that any vehicles that have been delivered to customers are affected. Batteries for the trucks are supplied by SK Innovation, a Korean supplier with a factory in Georgia.

The fire was discovered Feb. 4 at an outdoor lot in Dearborn where vehicles are held for quality checks, and production was halted a day later. The truck with the battery problem and two nearby vehicles were damaged by the fire, Bergg said. No injuries were reported.

Ramping up production of the Lightning is key to Ford’s goal of boosting electric-vehicle capacity to 600,000 units annually by the end of this year and 2 million units annually by the end of 2023. The automaker aims to boost Lightning production to 150,000 units annually by this year.